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In vitro anti-synovial sarcoma effect of diallyl trisulfide and mRNA profiling.

Authors :
Xia, Sheng-li
Ma, Zi-yuan
Wang, Bin
Gao, Feng
Yi, Cun-guo
Zhou, Xiao-xiao
Guo, Sheng-yang
Zhou, Li
Source :
Gene. Mar2022, Vol. 816, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

• The development of new therapeutic drug for SS treatment is urgent medical need. • Apoptosis, cycle arrest, intracellular ROS, mitochondria and autophagy were detected to identify effect of DATS on SS. • High-throughput RNA-sequencing analysis was performed to clarify a comprehensive molecular portrait for DATS-induced transcriptional regulation. • Go and KEGG analysis were performed to reveal the related molecular events induced by DATS pharmacological properties. • PPI network was conducted to identify hub genes and protein feature. Synovial sarcoma (SS) is a malignant soft tissue sarcoma and its natural history is a long, indolent clinical course followed by high rate of local recurrence and distant metastasis. Current therapies are still limited in increasing satisfactory of 5-year survival, especially for patients with recurrence and metastasis. Accordingly, finding new therapeutic drug for SS treatment is clinically urgent need. Diallyl trisulfide (DATS), a bioactive compound derived from garlic, is reported as a promising anti-cancer agent for various carcinomas. However, its effect on anti-SS remains unknown. This study investigated the anti-SS effect of DATS in human synovial sarcoma SW982 cells. CCK-8 assay were used to examine the cell viability. High-content Imaging System was used to examine the apoptosis, intracellular ROS and autophagy. Flow cytometry was used to detect cell cycle. qPCR and Western blot were used to examine the expression of related mRNA and protein. High-throughput RNA-sequencing and bio-information analysis were used to investigate the mRNA profiling. The results showed a suppressive effect of DATS on tumor biology of SW982 cells including inducing apoptosis, triggering G2/M cell cycle arrest, elevating intracellular ROS and damaging mitochondria. Further high-throughput RNA-sequencing analysis clarified a comprehensive molecular portrait for DATS-induced transcriptional regulation. Besides, protein–protein interaction (PPI) analysis demonstrated that a network consisted of FOXM1, CCNA2, CCNB1, MYBL2, PLK1 and CDK1 might be response for DATS-induced G2/M cell cycle arrest and increased intracellular ROS. Notably, protein feature analysis revealed structure enrichment in microtubule network like kinesin motors domain, and tubulin domain. Molecular function analysis suggested that DATS-induced dysfunction of microtubule network might be the major cause for its effect on cell cycle arrest and successive apoptosis. Furthermore, 28 hub genes (including KIF2C, PLK1, CDK1, BIRC5, CCNB2, CENPF, TPX2, TOP2A and so on) were determined. Finally, pathway analysis showed that DATS-induced differentially expressed genes were mainly involved in cell cycle. Collectively, our findings for the first time provided the DATS-induced cellular response and transcriptional profiling of SW982 cells, which proposes that suppression of DATS on SS is multi-targeted and represent a therapeutic evidence for SS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03781119
Volume :
816
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Gene
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
155285254
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gene.2021.146172